Ghanaian President to deliver Achebe Lecture
| Prof. Chinua Achebe
President John Mahama of Ghana will deliver the maiden Chinua Achebe Leadership Forum Lecture at Bard College in New York, USA.
A statement released by the organising
committee of the Forum said the lecture, scheduled to take place on
December 10, 2013, is intended to discuss the challenges facing Africa,
in keeping with the life and works of the late renowned novelist who
died early this year.
The theme of the event, ‘Africa’s
future: Hopes and impediments’, is believed to be inspired by Achebe’s
commitment to peace, progress and development of the continent.
The statement said that immediately
after the lecture, there will be a symposium, which will focus on the
role of women in the development and democratisation of Africa, with
Mahama and four others as panelists.
This year’s lecture is sponsored by the
Bard College President’s Office, Bard College Centre for International
Affairs and Civic Engagement, the Achebe Centre at Bard and the Chinua
Achebe Foundation.
The Foundation was established by the
novelist in the early 1990s. Chaired by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, it has,
from inception, worked tirelessly to promote peace in Africa through
the arts.
It has showcased the continent’s complex
cultural heritage to the world, while making efforts to recapture the
lost components of African fine art, literature and languages.
Apart from his literary exploits, Achebe earned a reputation as a leading critic of corruption and bad leadership in Nigeria.
He wrote extensively about racial and
ethnic bigotry and left behind a reputation as one who lived as a
formidable advocate for the poor and less privileged, as well as the
voiceless in Nigeria and other parts of Africa.
While he was the editor of the Heinemann
African Writers Series, it served as a vehicle for the promotion of a
body of African literature produced by a whole generation of African
writers, including Wole Soyinka, John Bekederemo-Clark, Christopher
Okigbo, Ayi Kwei Armah, Ngugi wa Thiong’o, Steve Biko, Ama Ata Aidoo,
Nadine Gordimer, Nuruddin Farah, Buchi Emecheta and Okot p’Bitek, to
name a few.
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